Friday, January 22, 2010

To live and die with Hun Sen


Jan 22, 2010
By Paul Vrieze Asia Times Online
"But when survival is your life goal you cannot have any vision. This is why Cambodia under Hun Sen is going nowhere, if not down the drain, [through] corruption, poverty, human-rights abuses, in spite of competent civil servants, dedicated civil society and abundant natural resources ... Hun Sen has had only two ways in dealing with his political opponents: Buy them or eliminate them either physically, [through] grenade attack, military coup [...] or politically, [through] sham lawsuits ... There is no example in the whole world of any country being a democratic and prosperous one with the same top leader for decades" - Sam Rainsy
PHNOM PENH - Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen recently marked his 25th anniversary as the Southeast Asian nation's leader. First appointed by the Cambodian National Assembly on January 14, 1985, he became at 33 years old the youngest prime minister in the world.

Hun Sen's journey from a communist leader to an elected head of government spans a quarter of a century of civil war, domestic and international upheaval, a negotiated peace and transition to democracy through which he and his Cambodia's People's Party (CPP) have imposed themselves as the country's deliverers of stability and order.

By retaining the helm in Cambodia's fractious politics for 25 years, he now stands among a unique category of leaders, ranking as the 11th-longest ruling leader in the world. In Southeast Asia, only the Sultan of Brunei, the number one longest-serving government leader since assuming office in 1967, has been in power longer than Hun Sen. Of the other nine longer-serving leaders, five are heads of governments in Africa and four are from the Middle East.

Hun Sen reflected on his long political career and humble beginnings in a speech at the National Institute for Education in Phnom Penh on January 12. "I became [foreign] minister when I was 27 years old, deputy prime minister when I was 29 years old and prime minister at 33 years old," Hun Sen said of his appointments in the People's Republic of Kampuchea - the communist state set up by Vietnam in 1979 after it toppled the Khmer Rouge, whose bloody regime caused the death of about 1.7 million Cambodians.

He recalled how he joined the anti-republican maquis, a movement which consisted of several resistance groups including the Khmer Rouge, in April 1970, explaining his move was "based on an appeal from King [Norodom] Sihanouk", Cambodia's monarch who had been ousted in a coup d'etat earlier that year. "Throughout 40 years, I have known all kinds of tastes. I knew how my commander commanded the troops and I knew how to make tea for him. I knew how to wash clothes for him," Hun Sen said in his now trademark plain-speaking public-address style.

The prime minister went on to talk about his political future, confirming his intention to run in the next election in 2013. "The party conference announced my candidacy for the future prime minister and ... last week Chea Sim [president of the CPP] also reconfirmed my nomination for the premiership," Hun Sen said before taking aim at opposition parties.

"Please do not try to limit the mandate of the premiership. You want the mandate limited because you are worrying you will lose to me," he said, while also reminding the audience he still had another three-and-a-half years in office under the mandate of the 2008 election, which his party, the CPP, won with a two-thirds legislative majority.

Hun Sen started on his political path in 1978, when he became a founding member of the Kampuchean United Front for National Salvation after fleeing to Vietnam in 1977 to avoid Khmer Rouge purges in the Eastern Zone, where he had been a Khmer Rouge regimental commander. The Front consisted of former Khmer Rouge cadres who were prepared by Vietnamese officials to become Cambodia's new leadership after the removal of the Khmer Rouge government.

The Vietnamese army and the Front brought down the Democratic Kampuchea regime on January 7, 1979, in reaction to bloody raids by Khmer Rouge forces into Vietnamese territory in 1978. As the Front's leaders assumed their positions in the new PRK government after the Khmer Rouge regime was toppled, Hun Sen became foreign minister.
The early years
Current and former government officials and people who knew Hun Sen in his youth or as a budding young communist leader said his rhetorical talents and ability to lead, learn, adapt and survive the changing political and ideological terrain in Cambodia were apparent from the start in his personality.

Hun Sen was born as Hun Bunnal on August 5, 1952, in Peam Koh Snar in Kompong Cham province, a village of tobacco farmers located on the banks of the Mekong River. Local villager Chhe Noeun, 61, who claimed to be a childhood friend of the premier, said during a visit to the village that he spent much time listening to his younger friend talk. "He was one of the kids who was smarter than the others. His speaking, his rhetoric, was very good. During farm work, he liked to chat a lot, he made a lot of jokes," he said.

Noeun said Hun Sen left the village to stay in a Buddhist pagoda in the capital when he was about 16 years old. The Hun family, he said, had left the village in about 1963 to move to Memot district, located on the Vietnamese border, but they returned in 1969 after the start of the American bombing campaign in east Cambodia.

After Hun Sen left the village, Noeun said, he did not see him again until 1974 when he showed up on a motorbike at a local primary school as a Khmer Rouge cadre carrying an AK-47 rifle. Hun Sen told his friend, "I just came again today and I don't know when I will come back or if I will die."

Veteran CPP lawmaker Cheam Yeap said during an interview last week that he remembered Hun Sen exhibited leadership qualities and a capacity to learn quickly early in his career. These skills, Yeap said, allowed Hun Sen to gain loyalty from his staff, to impress officials from Vietnam, whose military remained in Cambodia from 1979 to 1989, and to sway members of the Khmer People's Revolutionary Party - the previous name of the CPP.

"I met him in 1979 ... He was the youngest foreign minister in the world," Yeap recounted. "Even though he was five years younger than me, I saw he was hard working," he said. "[Hun Sen] only finished grade 3 or 4, before joining the resistance movement. Even though he studied a little bit, he learned very fast," Yeap said. "He liked to communicate with people, especially with those with more experience."

One man who takes a darker view of the young Hun Sen and his rise to power is Pen Sovann, the first prime minister of the PRK, who served as premier for only a few months in 1981 before being arrested and held under house arrest in Hanoi for nine years by the Vietnamese government. "Vietnam ordered me to be arrested by 12 armed soldiers. Hun Sen was there to read the charges against me," Sovann said during an interview at his Takeo province home. Sovann said he was purged by the Vietnamese authorities because of his independent political leadership and his opposition to a number of government policies proposed by Vietnam.

He claimed Hun Sen was appointed prime minister in 1985 because "[Vietnamese authorities] believed and depended on Hun Sen as they believed he would do everything for Vietnam." The former prime minister, who knew Hun Sen from the time he joined the Front in Vietnam, characterized him as smart and a talented public speaker, but also as an authoritarian with few scruples.

"He learns very fast and then he can lecture [on a topic] later on," he said. "Hun Sen has outstanding capacities. His intellect is strong, but he has no morals to go along with it." Sovann said he was "not surprised" by Hun Sen's world-beating political longevity. "Hun Sen likes power; he wants to increase his power. He doesn't listen to anyone ... If anyone criticizes him, he will do anything to defend his power."

Following the Paris Peace Agreements in the early 1990s and the subsequent United Nations-supervised transition from a Vietnamese-backed communist government to a fledgling democracy, Hun Sen quickly showed he was a clever politician who could woo Cambodia's largely rural and uneducated electorate. By the end of the decade, he had also managed to disband the Khmer Rouge step by step by offering amnesty to defectors.

Despite his political skills, Hun Sen did not shy away from using violence against political opposition. In 1997, he took over the government by force and the ensuing fighting killed about 100 people, mostly from the rival Funcinpec Party, according to a 2008 US Congressional Research Service (CRS) report, which referred to the takeover as an "unlawful seizure of power".

Before the military takeover, a grenade attack hit a peaceful opposition rally in Phnom Penh, which killed 16 children, men and women and wounded more than 100 others. Recent disclosures of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) probe into the attack, which was conducted because an American citizen was injured in the blast, were made under a Freedom of Information Act request filed by The Cambodia Daily, a local English-language newspaper.

The investigation, which was cut short due to intensifying threats to the FBI agent, found evidence that directly implicated Hun Sen's bodyguard unit and the CPP, while highly placed witnesses declined to cooperate with the FBI, according to the records disclosed to the newspaper. The US government reacted to the violent events of 1997 by banning direct aid to Cambodia for a decade. As the US Congressional Research Service noted, "The autocratic tendencies of Prime Minister Hun Sen have discouraged foreign investment and strained US-Cambodian relations."
Mixed reviews
Although opinions vary among researchers and observers on Hun Sen's accomplishments during his 25-year reign, most acknowledged the transformation of war-torn Cambodia into a stable, peaceful country with an open and growing economy as his principal achievement. Before economic growth came to a halt last year due to the global economic crisis, Cambodia's economy grew an average 9.5% per year from 2002 to 2008, according to a recent World Bank report.

However, human-rights abuses, land evictions, rampant corruption among government officials, a lack of an independent judiciary and intimidation of political opponents have also been part of life in Cambodia under Hun Sen, local and international human-rights groups have said. Last year saw a rise in court cases against political opponents and other critics of Hun Sen.

Opposition leader Sam Rainsy, of the eponymous political party, is currently in France but facing criminal charges in Cambodia over the removal of boundary posts along the border with Vietnam. Rainsy said Hun Sen had shown during his long premiership that his objectives were personal and did not serve ordinary Cambodians. "It is obvious that Hun Sen's only or predominant goal is to remain in power, to survive politically ... Power is everything for him. But above all, power means impunity for him and his clan," Rainsy wrote in an e-mail.

"But when survival is your life goal you cannot have any vision. This is why Cambodia under Hun Sen is going nowhere, if not down the drain, [through] corruption, poverty, human-rights abuses, in spite of competent civil servants, dedicated civil society and abundant natural resources," he wrote. "Hun Sen has had only two ways in dealing with his political opponents: Buy them or eliminate them either physically, [through] grenade attack, military coup [...] or politically, [through] sham lawsuits ... There is no example in the whole world of any country being a democratic and prosperous one with the same top leader for decades," Rainsy added.

According to historian Evan Gottesman, author of the 2003 book Cambodia After the Khmer Rouge, Hun Sen's durability is in itself exceptional. "The fact that the same man who led Cambodia in 1985 could also run the Cambodia of 2010 is remarkable," Gottesman said via e-mail. "Hun Sen's most impressive achievement was his ability to lead Cambodia from being an isolated communist country to economic and political integration with the non-communist countries of the region," he said.

"Hun Sen's greatest failure is his failure to promote, in fact, his willingness to undermine democratic institutions such as an independent judiciary, accountable security forces and a professional civil service," he added. According to Gottesman, three qualities are central to Hun Sen's hold on power: The first is ideological flexibility, which he said became apparent when Hun Sen decided to quickly abandon communist orthodox ideas in the late 1980s when it suited the situation.

"The second is a willingness to be absolutely ruthless with his opponents when he feels it necessary. The third is his cultivation of a patronage system that supports him," Gottesman wrote. "[A] lack of an independent judiciary or accountability for human-rights abuses persist because these hallmarks of modern democracies do not serve the interests of leaders who intend to remain in power indefinitely," he added. Reflecting on how the character of the 1980s communist PRK regime, many of whose officials are still in the government, influences Cambodia today, Gottesman said, "Cambodia's government is still built on patronage systems that support top officials, with Hun Sen at the top."
Rights and wrongs
International environmental watchdog Global Witness said in a February 2009 report entitled "Country for Sale" that its research indicated revenues from Cambodia's growing oil and mining industries were being siphoned off by a network of corrupt officials. "Rather than using these millions to lift its people out of poverty, Cambodia's government could instead continue to follow the example of neighboring Burma [Myanmar], where an autocratic elite uses money generated from the country's natural resource wealth to rule over an impoverished majority," the report warned.

Janice Beanland from rights group Amnesty International's Southeast Asia Team said in an e-mail that the protection of human rights in Cambodia under Hun Sen had come "a very long way" since the 1985 communist regime. However, she added that his government had often failed to undertake serious attempts to further improve the country's human-rights record, which remains poor. "[T]he lack of accountability and the culture of impunity that held sway [in the 1980s] remains in place to quite a degree. Judicial reform remains a plan, rule of law is not yet in place and for most Cambodians, there is very limited protection for human rights," Beanland said.

"[I]f the prime minister had wanted to institutionalize human-rights protection - through the legal system, the government administrative structures and independent institutions - he would have had the power to do so," she said. "The continued lack of integrity and independence within the court system, for instance, testifies to the limited human-rights commitment of the government."

Chea Vannath, a local independent political analyst, said Hun Sen's most important accomplishment was restoring peace in Cambodia, while adding that his premiership had lacked in economic management and improving child and maternal health. "His achievement is that he was able to bring peace to Cambodia, a very valuable achievement. His shortcoming is the economy, it moves but it stumbles ... It seems the economy could have done better, maternal and child health should also be better," she said.

Vannath said Hun Sen's strengths included his ability to cope and navigate a changing political climate and system, his ability to equitably share political power with others and his vigilance to not rest on his laurels."So far, another blessing is [his] good health," she added.

According to historian Henri Locard, who has taught at the Royal University of Phnom Penh since the early 1990s, one of Hun Sen's primary skills is his ability to fascinate the Cambodian public. "Hun Sen is a past-master in the control of rhetoric ... He is sure to hold the majority of the population by the invisible thread and the fascination of his words," Locard said. After the dark days of the Khmer Rouge and the communist government, Cambodians now "relish all their newly-acquired freedoms", he said, adding, "With one major exception: the freedom to challenge his all-embracing power ... there is a great deal of self-censorship exerted in this country."

Indeed, many civil society members and researchers consulted for this article, foreign and local, declined to comment directly on Hun Sen's premiership. CPP lawmaker Cheam Yeap contested Hun Sen's record of human-rights abuses, tolerance of corruption and intimidation of political opponents. "Fighting corruption is not easy. Europe and the US have these problems too," he said. "Sam Rainsy breaks the law and then he says his rights are violated when he gets charged."

Yeap contended that Hun Sen and other CPP members had built up the country after its near-complete destruction by the Khmer Rouge. "I would like to ask you who could do it? [Opposition leaders] Sam Rainsy, Ranariddh, Kem Sokha couldn't do it ... They came later on, then they demanded this, they demanded that. They want freedom to attack everyone, everything. The CPP cannot allow them to do that."

On December 27, the 25th anniversary of his appointment as acting prime minister, Hun Sen met with members of his family at a hotel in Phnom Penh and contemplated a time when he no longer ruled Cambodia. Should that day come, according to Hun Sen, members of his powerful extended family could find the tables turned against them if they alienated ordinary Cambodians.

"If Hun Sen loses power, you will become a target for attacks if you do not follow my advice," he said during his televised remarks, advising his family that they should show charity and concern for the less fortunate. It was a rare reflection by the strongman leader on the eventual limits of his rule.
Paul Vrieze is a reporter with the Phnom Penh-based The Cambodia Daily. Phann Ana, also a reporter at the newspaper, contributed to the reporting.

41 comments:

Anonymous said...

នេះហើយគេថាដើរតាមរាជរដ្ធាភិបាលត្រូវតែជួយ
ការពាររាជរដ្ធាភិបាលមិនដួចជនអគតិមួយចំនួនបានធ្វើឲ្យប្រជាជនជាប់គុកជាប់ច្រវាក់ហើយបោលរត់
ចោលប្រជាជននោះទេ។ជនទាំងនោះនឹងសាបសូន្យនៅពេលអនាគតខាងមុខនៅប្រទេសកម្ពុជា។
ហើយម្នាក់ៗមិនបានដឹងខ្លួនថានឹងជិតអសលក្ខណ៍
នោះទេ។ហើយថែមទាំងបង្គាប់ឲ្យប្រជាជនមួយចំនួនដើរធ្វើអំពើអាក្រក់ហើយបានចោតទៅដល់រដ្ធាភិបាលទៀត។

Anonymous said...

First look at his military hat, it is an exact copy of the NAZI's. Cambodian military hats in the sixties and through mid-seventies were like the Americans, and they were a lot nicer.

Second look at his given name, Preah Akkeak.... DECHO Hun Sen. That name DECH0 which perhaps means power, is the same name as the strong general, regional commander, and governor of Lvo in the 13th century. This general and six entourages were killed by the followers of Nen Rong, a buddhist monk, in Sokhotey as the young monk became a king afterwards, and thus Siam was born.

I am superstitious about this name.

Anonymous said...

hun sen is Preh bath THOAM MERK! per PUTH TUMNEAY! so he rules forever! Stop against him, he is meant to be! he's was born under sign of leo-dragon 2 powerful creatures combinations. stop dreaming!

Anonymous said...

Never let Hun Sen die with you because he will bring you to hell for millions of years. Let him die with his criminal comrades.

Anonymous said...

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100121/ap_on_bi_ge/as_china_killer_hero.

Cambodian people are too weak.

Anonymous said...

Oh please! HUN SEN is a fast learner? Tell me what is there to learn for HUN SEN the farmer pagoda boy who couldn't even finish the primary school? ahahahah

This is the fucken problem when people equate intelligent with learning! If you are talking about HUN SEN intelligent and he is just smart enough to stay alive and that mean by killing his opponent and take side with the victor! This intelligent is no different from animal that is trying to stay alive by finding food! Now if you are talking about learning and especially those who knew HUN SEN always said that HUN SEN learn fast? Tell me what subject did he learn and did he learn the same old shit over and over? In fact being a leader having charisma is far more important than having the ability to learn something! I mean what is there to learn when HUN SEN surrounded by hundred of Vietcong advisors who are telling or ordering him to do something that he may or may not like! The fact is all HUN SEN decisions in the past were made by the Vietcong government and HUN SEN is only a puppet! Even now all his decisions are base his advisors and as long as he can stay in power longer and gain more personal enrichment and he is okay with that and this is the trait of traitor!

It seems that people are more interested in counting the years that Hun Sen had been in power but they are not interested in counting his achievement in what he had done for Cambodia! For me Hun Sen is still the same person like he was 30 years ago and he is still the Vietcong puppet no matter how other people view him and that is his legacy!

Anonymous said...

"But when survival is your life goal you cannot have any vision. This is why Cambodia under Hun Sen is going nowhere, if not down the drain, [through] corruption, poverty, human-rights abuses, in spite of competent civil servants, dedicated civil society and abundant natural resources," he wrote.

This statement tells all about current Cambodian living under Hun Sen's regime. Thanks LP for your true statement.

Anonymous said...

2:54 AM you and your whole family are born to be Hun Sen's absolute slave so make sure lick his butt clean after his shit.

Anonymous said...

Ha ha 2:54 Am you and your family members have the task to do so make sure your Preh bath THOAM MERK's butt clean and no smell okay. Don't refuse because you are born to do that.

Anonymous said...

Coincidentally, I had a dream about Mr. Hun Sen and his family last night.

In the dream, I was attending a social function sponsored by Mr. Hun Sen and his siblings (Don’t understand why I was there since I am not one of his associates or officials). Any way, as I was having a drink, Mr. Hun Sen walked toward me and suddenly I saw someone in the crow pulled out the gun and aimed at him. Since Mr. Hun Sen was just beside me, my swift reaction was to push him aside so that the shooter could not harm him, and as a result he was safe.

I woke up and was afraid. I am living abroad and I am not affiliated with any political party, how can I have a dream like that? This is bad and I hope it only happens in that dream. I pray that any change of government in Cambodia will happen smoothly and orderly so that people will not suffer.

May Buddha bless us all.

Anonymous said...

Don't ever compare Xen to Sultan any longest serving leader. Xen is the world poorest and homeless leader while Sultan is one of the oil riches person and commit to serving and helping his people from housing to transportation. Xen is doing the opposition Cambodia is sold or gone.

Anonymous said...

who...to blame...not only hun's..but all congress person...know nothing except...corruption..$$$$...and raise their shit hand....to any law....and also young generation...they do shit...should they stand up...for their country...no....no...they will stand for their $$$$$$$$$$$$...go to helllllll

Anonymous said...

To say Hun Sen's 25 years as premiership has given him personal rewards but not for ordinary citizen is little overboard.
Hun Sen in fact does give people some opportunites for themselves
But under one condition:
Hun Sen takes in three, people take one or less than one.

Anonymous said...

I meant Xen is doing the opposite and Cambodia is sold or gone forever. So I wishes a short life to Xen and long life to Sultan.

Anonymous said...

Gottesman had missed the main point.

4- With 100,000 Hanoi's troops still occupying Cambodia today, plus over Five Millions Viet illegal immigrants continueing to flock into Cambodia to fulfill Ho Chi Minh dream of creating the Vietnamese Indochina Federation in the near future, including Lao. These Viets had gained Khmer citizenship and voted for PP. And Hanoi's core were hiding in all level of Ministries of Hun Sen 's puppet regime to direct, dictate, manipulate, plunder Khmer resources

Without this Hanoi's presence Hun Sen would be in trouble to hold on power until today.

Now without trainings and lacking of modern weapons in comaraison to Thai and Viet armies, how Hun Sen will withstand against Thai ???

100,000 Hanoi's troops will be waged this another Indochina warm in the near future.

Sithan Hin

Anonymous said...

Death to Hun Xen and all cpp cronies.

Anonymous said...

I hope it is a turning point for Hun Sen to starting thinking about his own people and the national interest. Good deeds prevail at last after 40 years of abuses by Hun Sen and his cronies!!!

Anonymous said...

dont say that you are Khmers, you guys are just a bunch of kantop slave race and behave as those kantop who created and formed you guys culturally and mentally

Anonymous said...

Yes,

Your Hanoi's slaves will die for Vietnamisation if your Hanoi's puppet prime minister Hun Khvang chhose to wage war with Thailand.

Lacking of trainings and modern weaponry in comparison to Thai or Hanoi's armies, you're Rag-Tag armies just to protect Hun's head from decapitating off his shoulder only.

Your demise will be very close, Hun Khvang and cronies, plus Rubber Stamp's king of Cambodia and his Hanoi's damned father Norodom Sihanouk.

Anonymous said...

Khmer people had surprised the world many times. During Ankgor Empire, they built great temples the world had ever seen. During Pol Pot regime, they killed millions of people. Cambodia was destructed by the khmer rouge ( year zero), but managed to survive after. Hun Sen is far less educated than, sihanouk, rannaridh, sam rainsy, but he beats all his opponent and became the longest ruler in Cambodia's history. we should give this man a lots of credits. don't critize him!!!
cpp supporter

Anonymous said...

SOLD and GONE

FOLD and DONE

BANK and SNORE

H I S T O R Y

Anonymous said...

7:04 AM,
could we jail this coward thief ?
he killed, he cheats, he betraies..
You must be an idiot to support that kind of crook.

Anonymous said...

This is kind of strange. There is a slew of biographical or memoire-like articles Usually, these kinds of articles are for someone who has or is resigning or retiring.

Anonymous said...

Welcome to Cambodia CPP Hun Sen 30 year performance Power by Hanoi.

Can Hun Sen the CPP be greeder then they are now...they are all $ sucking leaders who have no boundary.

Soon there is no more resources left to suck in this tiny and getting smaller by the day Cambodia! what will they do next to keep the cycle going?

Anonymous said...

When hatred to Hun Sen and CPP is your life goal you cannot have any vision. This is why Cambodia's opposition under Xam RainXy is going nowhere, if not down the drain, through the uprooting event along border post No. 185, insulting to anyoen who supports the CPP, create chaos in society, big liar... and runs really fast to overseas. "Xam RainXy has had only two ways in dealing with his political career: come back to Cambodia to face the trial on 27 January 2010. Don't just made a mess and runs fast like that, or unshamefully write a letter to apologise to PM Hun Sen... There is no example in the whole world of any country being a democratic and prosperous one with the same leader of opposition for decades,"

Khmer in Sydney CBD

Anonymous said...

Democratic Kampuchea Pol Pot Khmer Rouge Regime

Members:
Pol Pot
Nuon Chea
Ieng Sary
Ta Mok
Khieu Samphan
Son Sen
Ieng Thearith
Kaing Kek Iev
Hun Sen
Chea Sim
Heng Samrin
Hor Namhong
Keat Chhon
Ouk Bunchhoeun
Sim Ka...

Committed:
Tortures
Brutality
Executions
Massacres
Mass Murder
Genocide
Atrocities
Crimes Against Humanity
Starvations
Slavery
Force Labour
Overwork to Death
Human Abuses
Persecution
Unlawful Detention


Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Khmer Rouge Regime

Members:
Hun Sen
Chea Sim
Heng Samrin
Hor Namhong
Keat Chhon
Ouk Bunchhoeun
Sim Ka...

Committed:
Attempted Murders
Attempted Murder on Chea Vichea
Attempted Assassinations
Attempted Assassination on Sam Rainsy
Assassinations
Assassinated Journalists
Assassinated Political Opponents
Assassinated Leaders of the Free Trade Union
Assassinated over 80 members of Sam Rainsy Party.

"But as of today, over eighty members of my party have been assassinated. Countless others have been injured, arrested, jailed, or forced to go into hiding or into exile."
Sam Rainsy LIC 31 October 2009 - Cairo, Egypt
  
Executions
Executed over 100 members of FUNCINPEC Party
Murders
Murdered 3 Leaders of the Free Trade Union 
Murdered Chea Vichea
Murdered Ros Sovannareth
Murdered Hy Vuthy
Murdered Journalists
Murdered Khim Sambo
Murdered Khim Sambo's son 
Murdered members of Sam Rainsy Party.
Murdered activists of Sam Rainsy Party
Murdered Innocent Men
Murdered Innocent Women
Murdered Innocent Children
Killed Innocent Khmer Peoples.
Extrajudicial Execution
Grenade Attack
Terrorism
Drive by Shooting
Brutalities
Police Brutality Against Monks
Police Brutality Against Evictees
Tortures
Intimidations
Death Threats
Threatening
Human Abductions
Human Abuses
Human Rights Abuses
Human Trafficking
Drugs Trafficking
Under Age Child Sex
Corruptions
Bribery
Illegal Arrest
Illegal Mass Evictions
Illegal Land Grabbing
Illegal Firearms
Illegal Logging
Illegal Deforestation
Illegally use of remote detonation on Sokha Helicopter, while Hok Lundy and other military officials were on board.
Illegally Sold State Properties
Illegally Removed Parliamentary Immunity of Parliament Members
Plunder National Resources
Acid Attacks
Turn Cambodia into a Lawless Country.
Oppression
Injustice
Steal Votes
Bring Foreigners from Veitnam to vote in Cambodia for Cambodian People's Party.
Use Dead people's names to vote for Cambodian People's Party.
Disqualified potential Sam Rainsy Party's voters. 
Abuse the Court as a tools for CPP to send political opponents and journalists to jail.
Abuse of Power
Abuse the Laws
Abuse the National Election Committee
Abuse the National Assembly
Violate the Laws
Violate the Constitution
Violate the Paris Accords
Impunity
Persecution
Unlawful Detention
Death in custody.

Under the Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Khmer Rouge Regime, no criminals that has been committed crimes against journalists, political opponents, leaders of the Free Trade Union, innocent men, women and children have ever been brought to justice.

Anonymous said...

Khmer in sydney CBD,

There is no prosperity either when there is only one leader ruling the country for 30 years.

Why are you so myopic ? Because your buddy hero Keat Sokun couldn't get anywhere after 30 years trying to lick Hun Sen's ass ?

Anonymous said...

To 7:04 AM CPP supporter

According to you, "we should give this man" (Hun Sen) "a lots of credits" for killing journalists, political opponents, leaders of the Free Trade Union, innocent men, women and children? 

"don't critize"?

Ah juoy marai CPP supporter, what is wrong with you?

Anonymous said...

To Khmer Rouge supporter

Ah Khmer in Sydney CBD  

You're supported the Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Khmer Rouge Regime who is responsible for killing almost two million innocent Khmer peoples and counting.

Please do me a favor, don't ever tell anyone that you are Khmer, because you make Khmer peoples look bad.

Anonymous said...

Hun Sen is the biggest gangster and idiot Cambodia has ever produced. He is ugly as hell. He is so stupid that Cambodia is surrounded by white zones. He is so stupid that he didn't used the Cambodia's existing map of 1963. He is so stupid that Cambodia ends up losing more territory to the Viets. Hun Sen, if he is not a farmer or in power, this stupid idiot can't survive in the world. I guarantee you that after he is out of the job, he will be a homeless dog in Hanoi where the Viet gangsters will shoot him with their slingshots. Lol.

Anonymous said...

I like Hun Sen very much. He is the clearest leader in the Cambodian history!!!

Anonymous said...

Who's better than Hun Sen? Sihanouk, Lon Nol, Pol Pot or YOU? Shut the fuck up, refugees!

Ex. FANK said...

When those people dressed up military uniform, it still look like Khmer Rouge inside my eyes.

Anonymous said...

The longer Hun Sen stays in power,
it just show that all Khmer are covert, strong, smart, in words, but can't do no shit!!!!
That's all about being Khmer ? op[pressed by yuon ?
by Siam ? by Their own country men?
What would you do ?CRY ???

Anonymous said...

To ah 11:40. Listen mather f*cking faggot. Lol. People already voted that most ugly looking Hun Sh*t out in 1993, but that piece of ugly sh*t kept clinging on to power and then he took it by force. Even recently, he declared that by his order the entire Phnom Penh would be taken over within just 2 hours. Every other leaders were better than that MOST STUPID Hun Sh*t who is the most UGLY on world stage. Cambodia experiences the most lowly existence and territorial losses under the Hun Sh*t. Have you ever looked at the pic of Hun Sh*t with other World Leaders from the region? Hun Sh*t is the most ugly looking piece of sh*t who acted humble and a dawg. Hun Sh*t is simply a dawg and an idiot who can't perform his job. He has over a thousand advisors to help him make decision. WTF? Hun Sen does not have any brain and his the crudest bastard ever lives in Cambodia. F*ck you and ah Hun Sh*t, mather f*cker! Lol.

Anonymous said...

9:02am i really appreciate for your comment to Hun sen yuon dog clans.

loy man said...

Stone Forest offers sandstone bath ware

As furniture shop in Cambodia construction materials stated, the modern-day bathroom product manufacturer, Stone Forest, has brought sanitary fixures such as vessels as well as a tub in sandstone.
The basin features vibrant figures with three model, Moso, Cono, and River Pebble. Moso has a rectangular shape while Cono is a cone-morphed bowl. Finally the River Pebble which is shaped like underwater stones. All of the sinks have different patterns of sandstone.
The standalone bathtub, Papillon Bathtub, whose sandstone patterns are elliptic similar to those of an egg that is about to emerge from the its protected shell.

Unknown said...

The golden classic light
Trustworthy furniture shop in Cambodia construction materials highlighted, the new light medium, which emphasizes the golden age of global industrialization, comes with its strength.
Moreover, it was set up with the purpose of strongly to industrial evergreen and popular components.
Anyway it will provide the high quality that can stay for long time with users. Indeed, it is such the beautiful light with the classic design icons.

hongleng said...

The Modernity Garden Lamp
This is a new lighting model for outdoor design with great identity, trustworthy furniture shop in Cambodia construction materials said.
In addition this is such a garden lamp with a material mark and strongly modern, it can stand with any condition and provides the comfortable feeling.
One more thing there is a surprising volume, a contemporary artwork that enchants for its unique inclination and squared shapes.
Moreover you can enjoy in your garden at night with the beautiful and soft light, and you will feel fresh and relax with these great lamps.
Indeed this collection fits easily into private and contrast spaces connect to the perfect balance of shape, materials and precision of detail.

Unknown said...

The Special Design Apartment

Here is the apartment has been divided into living area, which consists of a large living room with kitchen and dining room, and sleeping area, leading to furniture shop in Phnom Penh
construction materials
highlighted.
One more thing in between the living area and sleeping area there is a service part providing two contemporary bathrooms and one utility.
Anyway the interior furniture design is simple with design scheme combining basic materials and natural colors of oak, white furniture and some detail accents in black.
By this side this approach allowed the house the freedom of doing any additional decorations such as art, colored, cushions, carpets, and accessories.

Unknown said...

Twitter Fight US Government about User’s Data Request
Twitter has made the legal claim against US government about surveillance laws, leading to digital marketing agencyreported.
By this way Twitter cannot allow US government know about their customers’ information, if their customers’ data are revealed, it seems violating the right to free speech.
As the firm said, “it brought the case in an effort to force the government to be more transparent about personal data requests”.
“The US government engages in extensive but incomplete speech about the scope of its national security surveillance activities as they pertain to US communications providers, while at the same time prohibiting service providers such as Twitter from providing their own informed perspective as potential recipients of various national security-related requests,” wrote Twitter.
“Technology companies have an obligation to protect their customers' sensitive information against overbroad government surveillance and to be candid with their customers about how their information is being used and shared”.